Among traditional Indigenous Australians there is no such thing as a belief in natural death. All deaths are considered to be the result of evil spirits or spells, usually influenced by an enemy. Often, a dying person will whisper the name of the person they think caused their death. If the identity of the guilty person is not known, a "magic man" will watch for a sign, such as an animal burrow leading from the grave showing the direction of the home of the guilty party. This may take years but the identity is always eventually discovered. The elders of the mob that the deceased belonged to then hold a meeting to decide a suitable punishment. A kurdaitcha may or may not be arranged to avenge them.
Illapurinja An
illapurinja, literally "the changed one", is a female kurdaitcha who is secretly sent by her husband to avenge some wrong, most often the failure of a woman to cut herself as a mark of sorrow on the death of a family member. Believed to be entirely mythical, the fear of the illapurinja would be enough to induce following the custom.
20th century The practice of kurdaitcha had died out completely in southern Australia by the 20th century although it was still carried out infrequently in the north. In a report in by the
Adelaide Advertiser in 1952, some Indigenous men had died in
The Granites gold mine in the
Tanami Desert, after reporting a sighting of a kurdaitcha man. They were very scared and danced a
corroboree to chase evil spirits away.
Anthropologist Ted Strehlow and doctors brought in to investigate said that the deaths were most likely caused by
malnutrition and
pneumonia, and Strehlow said that Aboriginal belief in "black magic" was in general dying out. ==Kurdaitcha shoes==